12 Tips I Wish I Knew as a Beginner Guitarist

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Mary Spender

Mary Spender

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 3 400
@scottdebruyn7038
@scottdebruyn7038 4 жыл бұрын
Best tip I've heard: "Don't just play a piece until you get it. Play it until you can't get it wrong." Nice video! :)
@Seadogstudio
@Seadogstudio 4 жыл бұрын
Scott Debruyn many of the tips is so fresh. I love it.
@LakriTs9
@LakriTs9 4 жыл бұрын
On top off that a trick u can do is when u get more knowledge swap the chords and position out off the song helps to and then u later on starts creating ur own variations :). don't be afraid to experiment.i'm a begineer myself but i find that really fun . The song kinda becomes a little bit more personal to. ^^ But yeah most important is to have fun.
@YouTenaza
@YouTenaza 4 жыл бұрын
I think this might depend on your personality. Learning to allow myself to do some mistakes while playing helped me a lot to not frustrate over a piece. Being too perfectionist can be a problem also.
@djsting
@djsting 4 жыл бұрын
I was given that tip back in high school. The context was choir, but I took it with me to everything I do. "An amateur practices until he gets it right. A professional practices until he cannot get it wrong."
@davidscargil9145
@davidscargil9145 4 жыл бұрын
@@LakriTs9 My middle 8`s,invariably consisted of the chords for the verse,in reverse order. Later on i realised,a lot of Bands do that.It made me feel slightly less Amateur. Ha ha
@himanshu6489
@himanshu6489 3 жыл бұрын
Bought a guitar 3 hours ago, tuned it & now I’m a guitarist
@Xuxixnywhwj1725
@Xuxixnywhwj1725 3 жыл бұрын
@@BrightBlueJim play it on any string
@jasonstacey8577
@jasonstacey8577 3 жыл бұрын
You won't be for long ,you will have broke it and smashed it up, trying to learn in the dark.😂🤣😂🤣
@rustykoenig3566
@rustykoenig3566 2 жыл бұрын
No... you are not a guitarist.... you are the BEST GUITARIST!
@daan5361
@daan5361 Жыл бұрын
You have to earn it
@rachelcook5697
@rachelcook5697 8 ай бұрын
YES U IZZZZZZ🤙🎼
@arleydouglas8682
@arleydouglas8682 3 жыл бұрын
"get the healthy 8 hours of sleep" *me watching this at 4 am* : O.O
@arnak7976
@arnak7976 3 жыл бұрын
oopsies
@Henry0870
@Henry0870 3 жыл бұрын
🤷🏻‍♂️ At 4 am you can still get 8 hours of sleep.....
@darkySp
@darkySp 3 жыл бұрын
You can still get it. Just not at the right time.
@matheuscesarcasante6498
@matheuscesarcasante6498 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly 4:14 am here hahaha
@JustM4Rii
@JustM4Rii 3 жыл бұрын
Matheus César Casante 4:10 for me rn
@anonymous-bh6cq
@anonymous-bh6cq 4 жыл бұрын
Dad: "What are you doing sitting a dark room?" You: "Playing with myself"
@kaseyeaton9239
@kaseyeaton9239 4 жыл бұрын
AHAHAHAH NOOO HFGDFDGSLDHFG
@luckyfluf0
@luckyfluf0 4 жыл бұрын
Dad: "You... Wait- what?!" You: "I'm playing guitar. By myself. In a dark room. What did you THINK I was doing?" Dad: "... Nothing... Carry on." XD This made me laugh, I'm sorry.
@can_sir125
@can_sir125 4 жыл бұрын
Dad:*EMERGENCY MEETING!!! "
@geraldhenrickson7472
@geraldhenrickson7472 4 жыл бұрын
Grow up, you are not funny.
@eldenboi8354
@eldenboi8354 4 жыл бұрын
@@can_sir125 What is that profile pic for? it looks familiar
@johnbowman4027
@johnbowman4027 4 жыл бұрын
I just called myself a Guitarist and it made me smile 😂
@ipsitaparida4471
@ipsitaparida4471 4 жыл бұрын
Me too haha
@mightymurph550
@mightymurph550 4 жыл бұрын
That’s good
@Baalaaxa
@Baalaaxa 4 жыл бұрын
I just called myself a guitarist, and laughed. With everyone else.
@fbhdqjwjrjgj
@fbhdqjwjrjgj 4 жыл бұрын
Yeah lol It makes me feel like I'm a pro lmao
@Levi89723
@Levi89723 3 жыл бұрын
@@Baalaaxa honestly same- probably the same for most people XDD
@whitevii1533
@whitevii1533 4 жыл бұрын
I've been drumming for 20 years. I AM THE METRONOME.
@whitewalker608
@whitewalker608 4 жыл бұрын
Ok. Give me a beat at 85bpm, now!
@adamisrael
@adamisrael 4 жыл бұрын
@@whitewalker608yes boss: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
@mkbest
@mkbest 4 жыл бұрын
Not. Yet.
@TylerS9812
@TylerS9812 4 жыл бұрын
Ima pianist and guitarist... drums are next Then I'll evolve to be THE METRONOME AND THE BAND
@Gregorypeckory
@Gregorypeckory 4 жыл бұрын
Yeah, but just because you are the time keeper, doesn't mean it's accurate. Lots of drummers feel the need to practice with something that keeps them honest; click, metronome, or backing tracks. I recall Jaco saying that most of the drummers he ever played with had poor time, and he had to take over the role of time keeping.
@alicecooper2473
@alicecooper2473 4 жыл бұрын
Tip 5. Wow... I don't know, but i never say "I'm a guitarist" Cuz i think that someone will overestimate me.
@lucia9549
@lucia9549 4 жыл бұрын
Same. I dont want someone asking to play a certain song when the only thing I'm confident in is a g major chord.
@DeadpoolX9
@DeadpoolX9 4 жыл бұрын
I dont because of all the fucking things people use to make fun of guitarists. No one wants to be the guy with the guitar at the party. Or maybe I just go to the wrong parties
@davidvosspoor4694
@davidvosspoor4694 4 жыл бұрын
Mary is right. If you're making music with a guitar, you're a guitarist! Now, somebody takes that as "I'm kinda like Jimi Hendrix" that's their own damn problem, not yours.
@davidvosspoor4694
@davidvosspoor4694 4 жыл бұрын
I used to NEVER think or call myself a "Musician", even after years of playing and writing. Same reason as you. Then I had a friend, piano student at university. She says "writing a pop song is so hard!! I've never been able to" I'm thinking "you play full Chopin pieces from memory, you call THAT 'very intuitive', but you have a hard time putting 3 or 4 triads together into a 3-min song?? whhat the fuckedy fuck!?! " Fast forward 15 years -> I'm a musician (no if's, but's). And my friend has written plenty of pop-folk songs too. But only after she picked up an acoustic and became a beginner (at guitar) again. Moral of the story? -> Happy playing everybody! And ROCK ON!
@joeeiynk1260
@joeeiynk1260 4 жыл бұрын
Yeah I'm not ready to call myself a guitarist. I'm barely comfortable saying I play guitar.
@self4autism333
@self4autism333 3 жыл бұрын
I played exclusively in complete dark for 1 year. Totally changed everything on a deep level. The motor memory was almost trivial in comparison to the conection to music that happens, you become completely aware of your sound. It becomes like a hidden pleasure you cant wait to experience again at the end of the day.
@kindergarten9592
@kindergarten9592 3 жыл бұрын
I love how you described it!
@puchip9
@puchip9 3 жыл бұрын
damn making me want to buy one now lol
@idlx420
@idlx420 3 жыл бұрын
So like a music nut?
@KurtisandHurdle
@KurtisandHurdle 3 жыл бұрын
I recently started playing in the dark with my eyes closed on accident because I practice at like 1 am so I don’t want to turn my light on. I think being in the dark helps me relax and focus only on the ringing of the strings. When I can see and I am looking around I am freaking out and going against my muscle memory because I’m thinking too much about it.
@ottomans2876
@ottomans2876 3 жыл бұрын
Its strange, I have just recently started playing and when i close my eyes or practice in the dark, I locate chords better than looking.
@TheTimeProphet
@TheTimeProphet 4 жыл бұрын
I have tried practicing in the dark, but it took me half an hour to find my guitar LOL
@r0siee0496
@r0siee0496 4 жыл бұрын
That would be me if I tried to do that
@tatyiaaustin9116
@tatyiaaustin9116 3 жыл бұрын
Lol!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@mrhuidrom
@mrhuidrom 3 жыл бұрын
😂🤣😂
@aritraganguly4018
@aritraganguly4018 3 жыл бұрын
😑😑
@natetolbert3671
@natetolbert3671 3 жыл бұрын
I stepped on mine. Maybe we should switch to grand piano.
@brianmarchetti6110
@brianmarchetti6110 4 жыл бұрын
I started playing at the age of 24 and struggled. By my mid-thirties, I was legally blind. My guitar playing improved since I was focused more on sound rather than trying to find spots on a grid. Playing in the dark is excellent advice. Picking up the guitar was one of the best decisions I ever made. My only regret is that I wish I started earlier. It's one of the few things I can still do. I have a hard time with songs that jump all over the neck, but I've gotten pretty good at cheating. Where there's a will...
@henasarkar6121
@henasarkar6121 4 жыл бұрын
I'm 24 and I've been taking guitar lessons for the last 2 months. Thank you for this, so motivating!
@keramidasnicolas2079
@keramidasnicolas2079 4 жыл бұрын
There's a way ...
@danaal-sheyyab8720
@danaal-sheyyab8720 4 жыл бұрын
I’m 23 and still saving money for a guitar
@londonbuell109
@londonbuell109 4 жыл бұрын
How does that make sense if your blind than how did you watch this video and than reply to it?
@mynamo12
@mynamo12 4 жыл бұрын
London Buell Are you kidding...? There are a lot of options for blind people, like assistive technology (for example, screen readers). They’re blind, not deaf and stupid.
@zoinket3568
@zoinket3568 4 жыл бұрын
ive been playing for less than a month and I've already learnt 2 songs already, I know its not much but I'm pretty proud of myself and its my dream to become a pro guitarist. thanks for these though, this is very helpful
@harshnarayan7656
@harshnarayan7656 4 жыл бұрын
How much have you improved?
@zoinket3568
@zoinket3568 3 жыл бұрын
@@harshnarayan7656 well uh ive learned more songs and im practicing chords and stuff lol
@jyotikukade2777
@jyotikukade2777 3 жыл бұрын
@@zoinket3568 I've got a brand new guitar just 5 days ago and I m a total beginner So....what do you think. I should learn the *cords and stuff first* or *fretting and picking* I m totally confused...cause I've just learned 'happy birthday' till now 😂
@zoinket3568
@zoinket3568 3 жыл бұрын
@@jyotikukade2777 you can start off with tabs, they help you learn songs and stuff by picking only one string. They're good to use and understandable
@jyotikukade2777
@jyotikukade2777 3 жыл бұрын
@@zoinket3568 oh...thanks a lot man 🙏🏻🙏🏻
@thedislikebutton163
@thedislikebutton163 4 жыл бұрын
Why does she look like so many celebs at once? Emma Watson, Emma Mackey, Jenna Fischer, damn.
@heynn1459
@heynn1459 4 жыл бұрын
Maeve Willey, Pam Beesley, and Hermione Granger in 1 person
@Godsangel124
@Godsangel124 4 жыл бұрын
You forgot Katie Holmes!
@venky193
@venky193 4 жыл бұрын
My Money is on Emma Mackey.. hell I'm ALL IN!!
@muchadoaboutusername5995
@muchadoaboutusername5995 4 жыл бұрын
looks like ellen page too edit: elliot page
@saritamandhare3963
@saritamandhare3963 4 жыл бұрын
Christian Stuart a bit!
@neopolythe
@neopolythe 4 жыл бұрын
1. Make sure you are comfortable when playing. Keep your shoulders and back relaxed. Keeping your shoulders relaxed will greatly increase your ability to play faster portions of a song. 2. Find your anchor point for your right hand. It is much easier to play fingerstyle when you properly anchor your right hand by either resting your pinky below the strings, our if you prefer, your wrist or heel of your hand above the strings or on the bridge. 3. Learn to selectively mute strings that you do not want to play. Open strings will resonate along with picked strings and this can make playing sound noisy. You can mute with both your right and left hands. 4. Slow it way down. Play along with a metronome and play a slow as you can for as long as you can. This will make your playing sound cleaner, and also build the muscle memory for when you play faster, allowing you to play faster while still sounding clean. 5. Try not to practice in front of other people. Practice on your own, and only play for others once you feel confident that you have the piece down. 6. Learning a new song involves learning the mechanical movements, then doing those movements fluidly and then playing with feeling. The one thing that sets all the guitar greats apart from the rest of the world is that they can play with feeling EVERY SINGLE TIME. 7. This one goes with 6. One of the best things you can do while playing guitar is to smile. Smile when you nail a particularly challenging run. Sure your family will think you are crazy, but this one really really works. Smiling while you play will teach you how to put more feeling into playing. 8. When you play guitar, it is just you and the guitar. You and your guitar are having a private conversation. Learn to make the world disappear and just focus on the two of you. 9. Learn to hear where you are going while playing, rather than think where your fingers have to be next. Jimmi Hendrix said his aim was to ultimately be one with the music, and I personally believe that when you start thinking in music rather than finger movements, then you get closer to achieving this. 10. Tap your foot to keep rhythm while playing. This one imparts a natural rhythm to your playing that listeners will immediately appreciated. 11. Rhythm rhythm rhythm. Practice with a metronome, until you can maintain the beat through-out your entire fingerstyle piece. You will notice that while playing parts you find challenging you will fall behind the metronome. The minute I start playing along with a metronome my wife will often tell me that my playing is sounding better than normal. A persons ear is naturally drawn to rhythm. 12. Don't be afraid to zoom in on parts of a song you are having difficulty with. If you have a chord change you are struggling with, just practice that chord change over and over, and you will find that you very quickly start over coming that road block. 13. Try to think ahead of where you currently are in a song. Once you get really comfortable playing a song you can start thing ahead so that you never end up blanking out on where to go next and losing rhythm while you figure it out. 14. Always make sure that your tuning is spot on while practicing. It does not matter how well you play a piece, if your guitar's tuning is out, it will not sound as could as it could. I tune my guitar every time I practice. Thank you for your great tips Mary. If I had to pick the most important two above it would be, smile while playing and play with a metronome/tap your foot while playing.
@Shugo819
@Shugo819 4 жыл бұрын
All great tips! Regarding number two, however, I would say try to avoid resting your pinky below the strings. Having an anchor is important, but anchoring with your pinky out like that creates extra tension in your hand, and the idea is that you want to play with as little tension as possible. It's a good anchor to have, but does ultimately affect your playing in the long run.
@Doc_Mitch
@Doc_Mitch 4 жыл бұрын
neopolythe Wow #8 is golden.
@ultimomos5918
@ultimomos5918 4 жыл бұрын
I've been playing probably about 8 years and I still struggle with 3. After a year away I'm coming back and really focusing on fixing the sloppy playing I've always had an issue with. It's frustrating (hi gain metal nerd so everything rings >_
@thejgod4982
@thejgod4982 4 жыл бұрын
@@Shugo819 I agree, anchoring is a personal preference. There are some song which i like to anchor when playing as it offers more stability however there are other songs where i feel that my hand is restricted by being anchored to one position when playing. Great tips all the same!
@rarasdfa12312
@rarasdfa12312 4 жыл бұрын
fuck this is gold, thank you!! im learning, I will follow each the advice you gave.
@jamesngina
@jamesngina 4 жыл бұрын
I'm blown away when musicians can play the guitar and sing at the same time like this. You have a beautiful voice and great song.
@noemihuisman3387
@noemihuisman3387 4 жыл бұрын
I sing when playing. I’m not a good singer but when I sing while playing it helps me so much with timing! It just makes sense when to change chords
@roywalton3981
@roywalton3981 3 жыл бұрын
It took me about a year and a half of playing to be able to sing and play at the same time -- until that I, like you, was amazed by it. I found that two songs helped me get over that hurdle -- "The Times They Are A-Changin'" by Bob Dylan and "True Love Will Find You in the End" by Daniel Johnston. Both have easy chord changes that correspond to the phrasing of the lyrics (to Noëmi's point). Obviously there are tons of others but these are songs I like that are in my singing range, that worked for me. Having the song printed out from something like Ultimate Guitar Chords helps too, with the chord indicated directly over the lyric where the change happens, with no extraneous musical notation.
@spacep0d
@spacep0d 3 жыл бұрын
It's easy as pie once guitar-playing is automatic! I sing and play too. But, the first bit is that you have to be adept enough with chord changes to easily play without looking, hence Mary's playing in the dark advice (which is good). You shouldn't need to look! Once all that is running smoothly it's easy to add singing on top, especially since you're keeping time with the guitar and following your own cues.
@janatherton9194
@janatherton9194 3 жыл бұрын
I agree with you, Mary's tips of playing while standing with your guitar and playing without looking/or playing in the dark make a difference if you intend to sing at the same time as play, especially with a microphone, as you won't be heard if the mike is too far from your face. I sang before I started playing the guitar, so I guess I'm learning the other way from others, but learning to find the different chords and notes without looking is a game changer.
@SlavicFox
@SlavicFox 3 жыл бұрын
🚨 SIMP ALERT 🚨
@lukenydam3772
@lukenydam3772 4 жыл бұрын
I’m a guitarist there I said it.
@dalal2492
@dalal2492 3 жыл бұрын
luke, the guitarist.
@ericalin6086
@ericalin6086 3 жыл бұрын
proudd
@boladamis1392
@boladamis1392 3 жыл бұрын
@@dalal2492 it does has a ring to it
@slackleashdogtraining3598
@slackleashdogtraining3598 2 ай бұрын
Me too! It’s nice to meet another GUITARIST
@akshatw7866
@akshatw7866 4 жыл бұрын
Damn! didn't know Maeve Wiley is such a great guitarist, singer and advisor!
@karanm867
@karanm867 4 жыл бұрын
Yeah bro that's what I thought.....
@greggsidwell8307
@greggsidwell8307 4 жыл бұрын
Maeve Wiley??
@keefjunior4061
@keefjunior4061 4 жыл бұрын
Gregg Sidwell she's a character played by Emma Mackey on a series called Sex Education. She looks remarkably similar for sure!
@LimeStreetRd
@LimeStreetRd 4 жыл бұрын
IKRRRRRRRRRRRR
@samarthsahu2893
@samarthsahu2893 4 жыл бұрын
Just came scrolling to see if there's someone feeling the same!
@kentshelley4739
@kentshelley4739 4 жыл бұрын
T-t-t-timing: I had a friend with a good singing voice but who was crap at keeping in time. I told him to do it as he danced, and after a while he'd be able to do the dance in his head. It worked - he got good timing - and became a dancer. 😂 Anyway, I just thought I'd pass on my tip for helping to get good timing: do it as a dance. And that's a tip for life too: do it as a dance. 🎼🎶💃🕺♫♬👍
@kentshelley4739
@kentshelley4739 4 жыл бұрын
@@abigail-tn5ds There's these gadgets too: www.soundbrenner.com/?TOF+%7C+Conversions+%7C+WW+%7C+28.5.20&Lookalike+%28Worldwide%2C+1%25%29+-+Facebook+Page+%7C+Sent+Message+%7C+90DAYS&fbclid=IwAR17NERno_7DVLXilXvszT9mAsjrBudIITZBEFquclkbfNd6DJ9Y8oa6s7w
@maxwilson7001
@maxwilson7001 4 жыл бұрын
That’s a great tip to remember. I have played with musicians who struggled to keep time. Maybe I will tell this to them. Haha.
@Idontknowwhattoputlmao11
@Idontknowwhattoputlmao11 4 жыл бұрын
Good tip! I read t-t-t-timing like the start of Dora in the tune d-d-d-Dora
@fbhdqjwjrjgj
@fbhdqjwjrjgj 4 жыл бұрын
@@Idontknowwhattoputlmao11 lol I was just about to say that
@Idontknowwhattoputlmao11
@Idontknowwhattoputlmao11 4 жыл бұрын
@@fbhdqjwjrjgj 😂
@sharingthetruth
@sharingthetruth 3 жыл бұрын
I’ve been playing for 28 years as a novice. I recently started learning from someone who tied it all together, but your method of playing in the dark has taken my playing to another level! Thank You
@rustykoenig3566
@rustykoenig3566 2 жыл бұрын
You are not teaching your fingers to play it.... you are teaching your brain to remove itself from the process!! :)
@Pfaeff
@Pfaeff 4 жыл бұрын
Something to add to the 7th point: Gear doesn't make you better, but it's a lot easier to blame "sounding bad" on bad gear, than it is on good gear. When I bought a good instrument for the first time, it really clicked and I knew I didn't sound bad because of my instrument and that made me work a lot harder.
@Futs101
@Futs101 4 жыл бұрын
I learned this as well. A brand new inexpensive guitar with a terrible "stock" setup vs fairly expensive used one with a perfect (to me) setup is such a jump in progress. But it does make you appreciate the extra work you put in to play the bad one.
@bathroomjon1
@bathroomjon1 4 жыл бұрын
Very true but, you don’t need to spend a shed load on gear. Just make sure it isn’t unplayable crap. Some of the really nasty cheap beginners kits (normally fender strat lookalikes) are so well priced they tempt people in on the basis of ‘well if I take to playing I can spend more’ later The reality is it can put you off because no one will spend out on a pro setup if they’ve only spent 100£ on the whole ‘kit’ !
@journeyofawesome8473
@journeyofawesome8473 4 жыл бұрын
"Spend a lot " means different things too different people.
@doctormock1
@doctormock1 4 жыл бұрын
I disagree with one thing you say. You say buy an instrument you like the look of so it will inspire you. We're talking musical instruments. Sound matters much more than looks. Buy an instrument you like the sound of. That sound will inspire you.
@bathroomjon1
@bathroomjon1 4 жыл бұрын
Journey of Awesome yes it does but anyone can work out that a guitar that’s worth £1k (regardless of whether you like the colour, sound or style will be better than one costing £100 - the point is, spend what you can reasonably afford and try and steer clear if the cheapest of the cheap
@macd1996
@macd1996 4 жыл бұрын
“Make sure your strap is at a suitable length” *has guitar at knee level* ... oh
@musicmuttonproduction3999
@musicmuttonproduction3999 4 жыл бұрын
Macd 199 this made me laugh way to hard and I don’t know why
@Johnbartheart
@Johnbartheart 4 жыл бұрын
Or Tom Morello armpit height..
@sharko3211
@sharko3211 4 жыл бұрын
Nahh mah dude ya fine it’s perfect Punk length
@chavoesunzombie
@chavoesunzombie 4 жыл бұрын
Agree! You don't need the other half of the neck! It's purely ornamental... I'm sure
@wreams2964
@wreams2964 4 жыл бұрын
*billie joe Armstrong has left the chat*
@obijuan3004
@obijuan3004 4 жыл бұрын
I have been doing this for decades. Playing in the dark tunes my ears to every string and develops a solid muscle memory. A metronome is a must.
@Leon-oc4em
@Leon-oc4em 4 жыл бұрын
5:50 YES, there were so many times when I couldn't get a progression right, I would give up and go to bed, and the next day I would get it right in the first couple of tries. A good night's sleep can make a huge difference.
@ElrohirGuitar
@ElrohirGuitar 4 жыл бұрын
My daughter bought me a guitar stand about 10 years ago. I had not played much for the previous 30 years, but I started playing again because the guitar was there and have enjoyed playing ever since.
@markknoop777
@markknoop777 4 жыл бұрын
Likewise. I found a good quality small amp and a few choice effects also helped to make playing more pleasurable and naturally ended up playing more.
@TrampConnoisseur
@TrampConnoisseur 4 жыл бұрын
I’m a classical violinist why am I here
@daniellablauvelt5840
@daniellablauvelt5840 3 жыл бұрын
please, i play clarinet, i asked myself the same thing
@aloevera3975
@aloevera3975 3 жыл бұрын
Because I’m not practicing violin 😭😔
@cloudanimal5209
@cloudanimal5209 3 жыл бұрын
Same
@babyfingrz8929
@babyfingrz8929 3 жыл бұрын
I should be practicing my violin now but...
@justakarii6692
@justakarii6692 3 жыл бұрын
I have the answer to all of you questions! you are here because.... you clicked on the video.
@NicholasANappiNick
@NicholasANappiNick 4 жыл бұрын
Mary when I play my wife says it sounds like I’m playing in the dark
@spiritzweispirit1st638
@spiritzweispirit1st638 4 жыл бұрын
Per Context' Dear Lord' Thats Funny!🎸👍
@luvsic35
@luvsic35 4 жыл бұрын
f
@jamescoughlan8193
@jamescoughlan8193 4 жыл бұрын
Lol nice one
@jandoe2576
@jandoe2576 4 жыл бұрын
Reported.
@SkateSafeNow
@SkateSafeNow 4 жыл бұрын
LOL
@kevinpackard6518
@kevinpackard6518 4 жыл бұрын
"Playing in the dark", sounds like the tittle of a song.
@norbertvarga1210
@norbertvarga1210 4 жыл бұрын
Or my search history
@JakeSchwepker
@JakeSchwepker 4 жыл бұрын
Fishin in the dark
@Ekkix
@Ekkix 4 жыл бұрын
Maybe kzbin.info/www/bejne/Z2OcnKh6eLanftU ?
@AlonsoUnoPuntoCinco
@AlonsoUnoPuntoCinco 4 жыл бұрын
Coil's album
@JonathanMartinez-eh8zt
@JonathanMartinez-eh8zt 4 жыл бұрын
The lyric “Hello darkness, my old friend” comes from Paul Simon’s habit of sitting in his bathroom in the dark and playing his guitar there because of the acoustics.
@shewh0rn
@shewh0rn 4 жыл бұрын
My undergrad is in music... and then I took an interest in psychology and neuroscience (which probably means I will perpetually be a student). Thank you for mentioning #12. This can't be stressed enough. Research has shown that WHEN you practice in relation to when you sleep can also make a difference in skills acquisition or memory retention (and there are different optimal strategies based on what you're trying to accomplish). The following ties in to sleep and that is... stop practicing the same thing over and over again for hours on end. While repetition is needed to get something into muscle memory, many people often overdo it. Let's say in a given week you want to practice comping, learn a song, and maybe a finger style exercise. You're better off practicing each of those things for 15 minutes per day (45 minutes total per day) for a total of 5 hours and 15 minutes for the week instead of practicing each skill for 3 hours, on 3 different days (for a total of 9 hours of practice for the week). Why? Because sleep is when the brain optimizes those new neural connections you've made by practicing earlier in the day. Giving your brain seven opportunities to optimize each skill will result in faster progression by using short practice sessions, vs. only one opportunity in the approach where you practice fewer days, but for a much longer period. In addition, there is a point of diminishing returns when focusing on one skill. In that 3 hour practice session, if it's skills based, you'll make the bulk of your progression in the very beginning of that session, and then the rest of it... not so much. If you're trying to memorize something, "cramming" by practicing for an extended period will improve memory retention for the very next day (so this is a good strategy if you need to learning something ASAP) but research shows that long-term retention is very poor when you employ cramming. There's a great lecture from The Great Courses called "The Learning Brain" (don't get it directly from The Great Courses website... it's like $250 bucks... Audible has it for $15... not sure what their logic is by having a ridiculously high price on their website). It was produced fairly recently so the research is still relevant. Guitar Zero is a good read as well (it's about the neuroscience and cognitive psychology of learning guitar at an older age). Finally, while it's not about psychology or neuroscience, "The Music Lesson" by bassist and music educator extraordinaire Victor Wooten combines fiction and non-fiction to convey Victor's experience and philosophies towards learning music. I'd recommend listening to the audio book, and not reading it as Victor narrates it himself and there's some aspects of the storytelling that are enhanced by Victor's performance.
@resueah7257
@resueah7257 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this very underrated and helpful input.
@mattmorris2867
@mattmorris2867 Жыл бұрын
Way too long. You verbose tool.
@x2.781
@x2.781 Жыл бұрын
Men, you say really useful thinks. Thanks for it!
@kendrakrust1244
@kendrakrust1244 4 жыл бұрын
I play in the dark while tripping on acid to recreate that real 80s rock concert experience.
@OscarASevilla
@OscarASevilla 4 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂
@user-qz1hq9kq3x
@user-qz1hq9kq3x 4 жыл бұрын
DissonancePlays 👏👏
@diggestbik3238
@diggestbik3238 4 жыл бұрын
😂
@page970
@page970 4 жыл бұрын
*D E V E R A S B R U T A L*
@chloerobins4487
@chloerobins4487 4 жыл бұрын
Lol
@Neznas1
@Neznas1 4 жыл бұрын
Wow, you have such a calming voice. You really make people believe in themselves with that calm voice - amazing!
@alevazquez9869
@alevazquez9869 3 жыл бұрын
I cannot help falling in love with your British accent.
@NivanSharma
@NivanSharma 4 жыл бұрын
I'm an intermediate guitarist but I've found some of these tips useful. Another advice I have is spend half of your practice time learning a new thing (whether thats a new song, technique, scale etc) and the other half playing the songs and backing tracks you enjoy. You'll stay more motivated and you'll get better at the same time
@Pieter_Auper
@Pieter_Auper 4 жыл бұрын
How do i do all that in 5 minutes?
@davidscargil9145
@davidscargil9145 4 жыл бұрын
Good advice. It`s easy to play stuff you can play. Learn how to play something you can`t. Treading water is easy,and reassuring,but will stop any progress.
@lukas6610
@lukas6610 4 жыл бұрын
@@Pieter_Auper i honestly feel like should play however long you like. If you dont like it just dont play i play the guitar daily because i want to not because i make myself do it
@cybo9977
@cybo9977 4 жыл бұрын
"5 minutes a day". Wow I must be pretty into guitar cause right now in quarantine I play up to 7 hours a day.
@mae6746
@mae6746 4 жыл бұрын
Omg saammme!!!!!
@Excelsior1937
@Excelsior1937 4 жыл бұрын
That’s great! Just make sure not to burn yourself out!
@cybo9977
@cybo9977 4 жыл бұрын
@@Excelsior1937 lmao so far in quarantine I have written 4, 40+ second, only guitar instrumental songs
@ryan._verma
@ryan._verma 4 жыл бұрын
@@cybo9977 same
4 жыл бұрын
That used to be when I was a teenager, I used to play many, many hours. Try to keep up with it, even if you reduce the hours when life starts getting in the way, starting over somehow it's proving harder for me than the learning the first time.
@qmento
@qmento 4 жыл бұрын
Great tips! I've been playing off and on for 45 years. Practicing in the dark is the best advice I've ever gotten. Thank you!
@beeallen-hine1421
@beeallen-hine1421 4 жыл бұрын
“Call yourself a guitarist” I don’t think I ever thought about that up until this point. Great advice
@thelickpolice1210
@thelickpolice1210 4 жыл бұрын
tl;dr shred only gets you attention for a few minutes, people in general really are interested in hearing complete music rather than impressive sections of songs The first tip really hit me hard, I remember the moment I realised that I can play the first two minutes of Far beyond the sun, the Rising force solo, the section between the country part and the jazz part of Jason Richardson's Hos Down, some mindless sweep arpeggios, a bit of No Boundaries by MAB, a part of Jason's solo in Aviator, a part of Through the fire and flames, first two minutes of Vivaldi's Summer, random bits of Andy James' songs, some more shredding and some more sweep arpeggios, but can't even play Nothing else matters from the start to finish. Or Stairway. Or Green day. Or even the bloody Wonderwall. I've been playing instruments for as long as I can remember (literally), I even studied performance arts (cello), so being 21 now it makes for about 17 years of playing instruments. I'm a programmer now, but I keep music as a big hobby, however that's besides the story. I've always been interested in playing fast, even when I was like 10 I always wanted my cello teacher to give me the fast pieces, the tough ones, the ones, that will impress the moms that came to watch their kids at the school concert. I don't see that as a bad approach of course, learning difficult pieces rather than "just to play something" taught me that practise was the key. This escalated even more when I joined the conservatory, as my professor was excited to teach technique, so my requests for tough pieces were even more welcome. But the real thing started when around that time I picked up the electric guitar (after years of it just sitting in my bedroom) and discovered all the shred. I've spent about 4 years perfecting NOTHING but technique, every day I was fierce to play faster than yesterday. I'd spend several hours daily just building speed. I thought this was the key to finally get recognised as a guitarist or a musician at all. Fast forward to something around a year ago, when I started socializing on my uni, we would go out in the park to drink and play guitars and I'd at some point borrow a guitar off of someone and do my thing. Of course people listened up, looked at my fingers flying across the fretboard, my right hand banging out one note right after the other, saying "wow damn u can play" and stuff. For fifteen minutes, till I ran out of 30-second shred segments of songs. Then the rest of the evening was all for the people that knew chords almost every song anyone there could think of, singing, having fun and stuff. A while later I met my current girlfriend, she was fascinated by people that play instruments, so I of course played for her. She even liked shred, said it was nice to look at thinking how much time had gone into it, but I'd every now and then play River flows in you, of course only a bit and terribly, as I'd never really practised fingerstyle or even playing music for the sake of musical value. And this is the one she remembered and would want me to play, saying "awww, this one is so nice, shame you don't know the whole thing", to which I thought something like "out of all the stuff I played this beginner fucking thing is the one you want me to play, phew.." but giving it a second thought, that was the moment I finally realised that while fretboard acrobacy certainly DOES impress people, playing beautiful complete music will make them stick around, seek your performance and truly like your playing. And also, many of the tough shreddy bits are just a part of a nice song, so why not just learn the whole thing? :) If you read this far, thanks. Hope this helps you. Have a nice day and happy playing, whatever instrument it is.
@glammer
@glammer 4 жыл бұрын
I'd advise any beginner to start writing asap. Songwriters get paid more than musicians for a reason: because it's harder to do. I could play famous solos after a couple of years. It took me six years to write something I'd let anybody hear and even then it was quite naive.
@stanphillips7277
@stanphillips7277 4 жыл бұрын
I normally am a bit long winded if I choose to comment at all but, in this case I am going to have to cut myself short and say only part of what I'm thinking and, if possible I'll return later to complete my thoughts. I read your entire comment and couldn't agree more, being 48 yrs old and having spent so much time practicing lead blues stuff, 1 or 2 sweeping arpeggios and some riffs, finger tapping,, mainly though I spent a lot of time having fun improvising leads over backing tracks of my own on an old 4 track , or joining in on the radio with jazz or blues instrumentals. As much as I enjoy doing that , it gets tedious after awhile for me and anyone else who is interested. At first it's , wow , you really jam, but the simple Songs I've learned to play and sing , a few chords and that's what people want to hear are the songs , little stories, poetry in motion. People respond to music, and that's all cultures, and not just the human animal. Music hath charms right? People love stories and songs are these little stories that are more apt to make people cry, I think, than a beautiful instrumental, because the words hit so hard when set properly to music. Chris Cornell of Soundgarden fame(God rest his soul) would do an acoustic version of I will always love you, Dolly Parton's song popularized by Whitney Houston and, it would break up the monotony for him and was amazing for the audience as well. He does a great cover of Michael Jackson's Billie Jean , more a rendition than a cover, and that's the other great thing about guitar, music in general is it's all Rock and Roll, and there are no rules. We always hunger to improve and learn more, but the most important thing is having fun. You and those listening and, people respond to your enthusiasm. If you're having fun, 3 chords and the truth, huh? That's as good as 1 million notes per second, flight of the bumble bee is always engaging ,with it's speed and required dexterity, but the little stories, Bob Dylan or Led Zeppelin, are the ones that are most viscerally impressive, when you feel something, again I think, is when your on to something. Instrumental like Little Wing, or just a little 3 chord song like All along the watchtower. I've managed,once again to have no discipline when it comes to talking music and I really gotta go. If you've come this far lol, I appreciate your patience but music is really something. For those of us who are lucky enough, blessed enough to be passionate about it, to get it,the power of it....I think we're all very lucky. A blessing to have this powerful thing in our lives and love it above all things, or at least as well. We have something special. Bonnie Raits father , John Rait ,famous for his big voice, showtunes like "Oklahoma" Broadway stuff said something like 'there are only 2 kinds of music, Zippidy Doo Da, and the blues" and Duke Ellington said "there are only 2 kinds of music , Good music , and the other stuff'.....I really like good music, both kinds. ☮️ Peace , Stan
@thelickpolice1210
@thelickpolice1210 4 жыл бұрын
@@stanphillips7277 Great comment Stan, I'm glad mine spoke to you on these levels
@fredhughes4115
@fredhughes4115 4 жыл бұрын
Sometimes I feel that youtube comments can be unnecessarily lengthy, but dude, in this case I really enjoyed the whole freakin' story. I think that this point about learning entire songs cannot be overstated, and you did a great job of illustrating that idea with your own story. I have had a similar journey with my own playing and awakening, but it sounds like you've practiced more that I have, and you told it better that I would have. Thanks for this.
@abigailkay2778
@abigailkay2778 3 жыл бұрын
I told my parents I wanna learn and they said that would be cool and they said they might get me one for my birthday coming in March
@emilymason9836
@emilymason9836 3 жыл бұрын
I hope you get it! It's an amazing experience
@ant7936
@ant7936 3 жыл бұрын
I hope they're not politicians.
@idlx420
@idlx420 3 жыл бұрын
If you get one, def make sure to start with a simple song that you love. That will hook you on guitar instantly, at least it did for me. :)
@LuciaNoel
@LuciaNoel 3 жыл бұрын
My friends just got me one for my 18th bday!!!
@jamieg2427
@jamieg2427 3 жыл бұрын
hi abigail: look on wikipedia into major thirds tuning and perfect fourths tuning. i use major thirds and while it's really different, it reduces the basics you need to learn. it also forces you to figure out why things are the way they are. but it's also more complicated because nobody plays this way. look it up and decide for yourself!
@sepehrmirshahi2246
@sepehrmirshahi2246 4 жыл бұрын
Wow, her voice is just so deep and how professional she acts while giving tips. Fun fact, at first I said, I'll just watch until the tips are over. But when she started singing, daammmm what a nice voice. I hope you achieve success at your career.
@NatureandSpirit111
@NatureandSpirit111 4 жыл бұрын
In my opinion practice with a purpose. Don’t just start playing as fast as you can. Start slow and gradually move up in speed paying attention to string muting. Also, don’t over practice! If you’re over practicing you’re practicing without any real purpose, not paying attention to your string muting or hand synchronization and moving through pieces too fast with no idea or concept of time. Practice with a metronome. And if you just don’t have it that day, take a break and come back to it the next day or in a couple days, until you have more focus on practice with a purpose. If you think about it, you might practice extremely well and have great hand sync but the next three days you don’t and your muscle memory goes right out the door. You need consistent practice with good hand synch and timing to ingrain that in your hands and keep it there.
@lizspt2394
@lizspt2394 4 жыл бұрын
I totally agree! But I think that's what you should do when you start wanted to learn seriously, when you decide you want to become a better and better musician, but before that I'd just go straight ahead and just try to please yourself
@hunterraoulduke
@hunterraoulduke 4 жыл бұрын
How do you over practice? Just take a break and come back later. I practice in 15 to 20 min intervals multiple times a day. Each time i try to work on something a little different but the same. Pactice new cords , then those new chords with different strums , later just a practice exercises .
@NatureandSpirit111
@NatureandSpirit111 4 жыл бұрын
@@hunterraoulduke IMO if your not practicing with proper technique it’s a waste of time and effort. When people get tired or bored and noodle around it’s probably time to put it down. Otherwise you emphasize bad technique and your undoing all the good technique you were learning.
@hunterraoulduke
@hunterraoulduke 4 жыл бұрын
@@NatureandSpirit111 im sure noodling has its benefits. If i get to make it sloppy i just take a break for a bit, and good when i come back. There is nothing wrong with breaks. when i get sloppy it shows me what bad habits i have tendcy for and how to fix it because i realize why something is not working for me. Sloppy play helped me figure out what causing ceratin issues and to do things like lower my thumb on the neck to gap so i dont touch surroundingstring, to tuck my elbow in. Shit now that i think about sloppy play taught me a lot with out direction from anyone.
@NatureandSpirit111
@NatureandSpirit111 4 жыл бұрын
@@hunterraoulduke you could be right. For me it didn’t work out that way. We’re all different though. I never realized what was causing my sloppy play and it became very hard breaking out of my patterns after so many years when I tried to take lessons. Sometimes after I take a break and come back I feel like I play way better and seem to sound better too. That’s why I figured it was better from a long term standpoint plus it’s more fun that way for me and that keeps me motivated. I’m nowhere near where I want to be but working my way there.
@KipIngram
@KipIngram 3 жыл бұрын
I think I could listen to Mary talk all day long. What a wonderful voice.
@evaskjerd
@evaskjerd 3 жыл бұрын
I think It is because she must be English, because if she were North American, oh God, what a horrible tone of voice she should be, like speaking through her nose🙂like almost north american does🤨
@KipIngram
@KipIngram 3 жыл бұрын
@@evaskjerd I certainly presumed she's English. And I agree with you, I think - I think my reaction wouldn't have been the same if I'd pegged her as some region of America. I remember getting the same kind of reaction from myself once while watching a Kate Beckinsale interview.
@mchlroopnarine0
@mchlroopnarine0 3 жыл бұрын
Bristol? It's in her song, Primrose.
@spacep0d
@spacep0d 3 жыл бұрын
Her voice is incredible, but not just because of the accent...it's the tonality of her voice...and ZERO horrid fry tones. It's just a beautiful instrument and she clearly takes care of it. There's a correlation I think between great singers and their dulcet speaking voices. I've noticed the connection! I've never noticed someone with awful creaky fry tones singing like this.
@mr.rodrigo
@mr.rodrigo 4 жыл бұрын
5:07 That’s Maeve and Otis, You can’t deny it...
@bvgg2630
@bvgg2630 4 жыл бұрын
Omg-
@fusex
@fusex 4 жыл бұрын
ohh myyy.. hell yeah
@Pianomagicdude
@Pianomagicdude 4 жыл бұрын
In the early days of one of my bands, the bass player actually suggested we do your tip #11! We'd work on songs together for a few hours, then run through them with the lights out. It made us concentrate - and (most importantly) it made us listen to each other more carefully to make sure we were locked in. I completely forgot that we ever did this, but on down the road I'm going to to try it out again!
@ghosttownreview1531
@ghosttownreview1531 4 жыл бұрын
Leave it to the bass player to come up with something profoundly creative! (Bass is my favorite instrument to play). I practice daily and will play in the dark probably once a week just to keep my muscle memory sharp. And yes, it always helps me listen to the rest of the music more carefully.
@spiderbabybill
@spiderbabybill 4 жыл бұрын
@@ghosttownreview1531 Classic bassist response! (Only joking - I love basslines and sometimes the people who play them)
@le_th_
@le_th_ 4 жыл бұрын
Hmmm, sounds like your bass player was diplomatically telling the rest of you to listen and pay closer attention to what you were playing. lol ; )
@frankstabler1920
@frankstabler1920 Жыл бұрын
Beautiful voice. Love your playing. I’ve been a guitarist for over 50 years and I still learned something from your 12 tips. Thank you.
@jazzguitarneophyte-christo7988
@jazzguitarneophyte-christo7988 4 жыл бұрын
I've been playing for quite some years now and this is the BEST beginner advice I've seen in KZbin! Experience players may benefit from your advice as well! Thank you!
@GeriMars
@GeriMars 4 жыл бұрын
All of this is great advice. More than half a century onto my life, I'm finally realizing the importance of sleep and its countless benefits to everything from biological, physiological, mental, psychological to even spiritual. Good practice/work habits and falling asleep with a positive attitude will get you where you want to go, and transform you into whatever you want to be, faster than just about anything else on the planet. And you won't be frustrated, worn out and tired. You'll be energized and excited. Everyone can spare 5 minutes a day. Most of us waste more time than that watching some idiotic thing on TV or just staring at social media. Imagine the rewards of applying it to something you really want to do. As Mary said, you'll quickly lose track of time and spend it learning, practicing and playing.
@flycubfly
@flycubfly 4 жыл бұрын
Some of the best tips ever and I agree with them all. I feel #7 is so so important . Get a guitar that really trips your trigger. You’ll wanna play it simply because you like the guitar . I ran into this problem . I have a new guitar that just didn’t feel comfortable to me or ..... just wasn’t what I wanted so there for I lost interest. After several years I finally went and picked up a guitar that felt comfortable and was absolutely beautiful . I just can’t stop admiring this guitar , so I pick it up constantly and play it. It really made a difference for me.
@rowan2086
@rowan2086 4 жыл бұрын
its such a good feeling when you’re the only guitarist in your band and someones like “what do you play?” and you get to say “oh, me? im the guitarist”
@ideitbawxproductions1880
@ideitbawxproductions1880 4 жыл бұрын
Another version of step 11 (call it step 11.5 if you wish), is practicing in front of a mirror. Pros: it keeps your eyes away from the guitar while not completely removing the need to look when you need to. It does help reinforcing muscle memory and playing without looking at the guitar. Cons: you may catch yourself looking for reflective surfaces during performances. I have done this, and it's distracting not just to you, but the audience as well. at this point, practice in the dark or with your eyes closed
@SkateSafeNow
@SkateSafeNow 4 жыл бұрын
Totally.
@s.k.12
@s.k.12 3 жыл бұрын
I am still a beginner and when you said, "Accompany me", I thought I wasn't good enough but when I started playing and the chords started lining up, it felt so hauntingly good! Thank you for that! Kudos to the great videos you make. P.S. Congrats again on the John Mayer thing that happened (Both your version and his actual song are so darn good).
@thearmoredguy3663
@thearmoredguy3663 4 жыл бұрын
I'm playing the piano and the last tip is really important, but i use it so, when i'm practicing and something does not work i play something else that i enjoy and know and i try what did not work again and most of the times it clicks second time.
@vilophance7031
@vilophance7031 4 жыл бұрын
I've spent so much time on tips #12. I guess I am a good guitarist
@justanothernoobe
@justanothernoobe 3 жыл бұрын
I just love how you keep an open mind and keep growing: every time I hear you play Primrose, I swear you allow it breathe and grown in its own way. I love it... the slightest changes in inflection, tone, rhythm, pace ... I love the thought that your songs are an integral / bi-product of you and your own core - so you allow to grow and develop just as you do too. It's just beautiful to see and hear :)
@xCrowii
@xCrowii 4 жыл бұрын
Damn homie your voice is smooth asf, makes me feel really calm listening to your tips
@timflatus
@timflatus 4 жыл бұрын
5: Or "musician", this is particularly important for women. You are what you do every day, get over your imposter syndrome right now. It has nothing to do with how good you or anyone else thinks you are, it's just a functional description of what you do. Great advice.
@willb3698
@willb3698 3 жыл бұрын
IU had no idea HOW MUCH I had given in to the imposter syndrome. Has taken me a while to realise yet alone just working on it.
@donnar278
@donnar278 3 жыл бұрын
Listen to everything she says. She is spot-on with every tip. I've been all over the internet for 3 years regarding beginner tips. Now that I'm no longer a beginner, I totally agree with everything she says.
@EvLloyd
@EvLloyd 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I'm a middle aged beginner, and the things that you've said really make sense. Really appreciate it
@TheBaconWizard
@TheBaconWizard 4 жыл бұрын
same here.
@PeterTessyman
@PeterTessyman 4 жыл бұрын
Same.
@Futs101
@Futs101 4 жыл бұрын
Same here at 51. I am taking Mary's beginner course. It's done quite well and well worth it. Hardest part for me is getting my fingers to contort to ungodly positions lol
@ramonalcasabas998
@ramonalcasabas998 4 жыл бұрын
Same here.
@deathbunny3048
@deathbunny3048 4 жыл бұрын
You look like Emma Watson's cousin or something XD
@estherkrishna1149
@estherkrishna1149 4 жыл бұрын
Omg! I see it!
@maryannehickey2741
@maryannehickey2741 4 жыл бұрын
DeathBunny thought the same
@rvenferlesh1079
@rvenferlesh1079 4 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I thought!
@marinljulj4341
@marinljulj4341 4 жыл бұрын
tru
@vipakat9613
@vipakat9613 4 жыл бұрын
Yep yep
@MattSwain1
@MattSwain1 2 жыл бұрын
Tip 1 about about learning songs not riffs immediately rings true for me. I’ve tried and given up several times and I think not ever learning anything completely was a big part of the problem. I’ve started again recently with the approach of learning songs and it’s much more satisfying and might actually stick this time 😊
@Piub
@Piub 4 жыл бұрын
Just found about you a couple days ago. And i'm so grateful. You're such a nice woman not afraid to talk about how hard it is to learn and how often we're going to make mistakes even after many years of practice. Not only showing your perfect recordings like in "why georgia", a video that i loved. Keep it up, you're great and thank you for what you do. Love from france
@ruidias4969
@ruidias4969 4 жыл бұрын
I'm playing for 2 months now and I've had most of these habits. I practice from 30 mins to 2 hours per day (some days i just don't) Almost got my first song , crying lightning bt the arctic monkeys And I'm now getting my first electric guitar aswell
@sleepingsheep8856
@sleepingsheep8856 4 жыл бұрын
you’re doing great! keep going
@MsBlueRajah
@MsBlueRajah 4 жыл бұрын
welcome to the Dark Side - electric is so f'n great
@zayraortega2737
@zayraortega2737 4 жыл бұрын
Crying lightning was my first one as well :')
@MissSchnickfitzel
@MissSchnickfitzel 4 жыл бұрын
Ive been playing for 2 years and cant do shit because i rarely practice
@jaivaidya7571
@jaivaidya7571 3 жыл бұрын
Congratulations mate. You never forget your first !
@richwhalley4634
@richwhalley4634 3 жыл бұрын
You are wise beyond your years . Been playing for 56 years and enjoy the way you present a subject . Along the lines of number 3 -it’s not the amount of notes you play that’s important it’s playing with feeling .You can connect you heart with one note and feel all the joy of the world . You play and sing with your heart . Keep up the good work ! Rich Whalley “Blues Hangover”
@ltdgz3818
@ltdgz3818 4 жыл бұрын
When you play in the dark dont forget the guitar!
@junaidesse
@junaidesse 4 жыл бұрын
Lmao
@junaidesse
@junaidesse 4 жыл бұрын
You win the internet for today, or well, just my laughs, haha Ltd gz
@keefjunior4061
@keefjunior4061 4 жыл бұрын
Practice when you're insanely depressed. I'm always surprised at my playing under great stress and depression. Avoid pinene terpenoids. Don't practice on a full belly. Have a hedgehog in the same room. All good advice!
@geespar1
@geespar1 4 жыл бұрын
The hedgehog is the best tip on here - not easily achieved but an absolute must
@Andrew-wn1pr
@Andrew-wn1pr 4 жыл бұрын
"Pinene terps" got me.
@roncallahan40
@roncallahan40 4 жыл бұрын
Hey man maybe you need to get help for your insane depression......lol
@keefjunior4061
@keefjunior4061 4 жыл бұрын
Ron Callahan nah... I've been dealing with it since 2003, and in the last 45 days I lost my mother and them my cat of 16 years, Zipper. It was like getting my depression tank topped off for another 5 years. To be honest, I'm surprised I haven't died of a broken heart yet. I'm in hell these last few weeks. I barely know what's real anymore. My guitar keeps me grounded a bit though.
@bogdananderson1472
@bogdananderson1472 4 жыл бұрын
I was depressed and my best song was "Black Dog " by Led Zeppelin. I think that Someone slipped me a bad trip at the time.
@yourfriendlyneighborhoodca9576
@yourfriendlyneighborhoodca9576 3 жыл бұрын
What’s crazy is I first watched this video about 5 months ago and couldn’t play B minor. And now I can. Thanks Mary Spender and to everyone playing guitar 🎸, keep rocking 🤘🏽
@gooe9561
@gooe9561 4 жыл бұрын
You can only defeat yourself. Never give up and be patient. Learning guitar is like learning another language. It takes time so don't give up.
@markrup6369
@markrup6369 4 жыл бұрын
Mary -- great advice. I have no issue calling myself a "guitarist" but I WANT to call myself is a "musician." I'm a looooong way away from that.
@cowieson
@cowieson 4 жыл бұрын
Mark Rup this is really interesting. I definitely resonate with it - I’ve been playing for more than half of my life now but still really consider myself a guitarist and not a musician per se. Maybe that’s just a personal judgement thing. What do you think are the factors? My brother is someone I consider a musician - wonderful guitarist but also plays keys and others. Perhaps it’s because I feel that he’s a musician first and the guitar is just a vessel? Hard to put the finger on!
@markrup6369
@markrup6369 4 жыл бұрын
@@cowieson For me, I guess it's several factors. I have been playing guitar for over 40 years. I can play just about anything -- but it's always other peoples music. ZZ Top's La Grange? Hell yeah, I can play the solos note for note. Pearl Jam's Yellow Ledbetter? Same thing. But ask me to improvise my own stuff over those same chord progressions and I'm at a loss. Every time i try it all just sounds the same -- IDK, maybe that's my "sound." Haha. And writing -- i have never written an original piece of music -- and not for a lack of trying. Believe me, I've tried. I am so envious of people like Mary, like Paul Davids, like Darrel Braun, etc. that can sit down and just noodle and it sounds great. Or write their own original riffs. Hell, I'm embarrassed to go into a Guitar Center and plug in. I just end up playing some REM song or some Foo Fighters song. It may sound good, but I'd rather just "noodle" without reservation and have it sound legit.
@spiderbabybill
@spiderbabybill 4 жыл бұрын
@@markrup6369 What helped me a lot to break out of the pentatonic trap was taking lessons from a teacher who taught music theory. A few very simple principles open up whole new ways to approach improvisation. I watch Rick Beato's channel a lot and his videos help to keep that information fresh. And I don't think I could play "La Grange" note-for-note for what it's worth :-). Love that track.
@aldo_mores
@aldo_mores 4 жыл бұрын
I had some issue with tip no. 5 ("call yourself a guitarist"), for I have put some thought and have had some conversations about that with other people. An interesting point of view I heard about referred to the level of the individual: - Guitar player: a person that plays guitar, as if it were just a set of instructions to follow. - Guitarist: a person with a deeper understanding of the instrument, knowing how to inject something of their own onto the instrument (come up with ideas, write riffs or songs, improvise or something on the like). - Musician: a person whose understanding and comprehension of music is not limited to the guitar (or any single instrument for that matter), and doesn't depend of it to comprehend or generate musical ideas. For me, it's a mix of the idea above and this: there's no major distinction between being a guitarist or a musician, it's more about what the individual has to actually do with it (music or guitar). It's not the same a doctor/lawyer/etc. that plays guitar really well, than having a person that not only plays guitar (or whatever instrument[s]) really well, but actually does for a living and it's what their life is about. And I know people are not just unidimensional beings who can only be driven by their profession, but it's fair to say that there's something in most people's lives that makes up for most of their dreams, passion and drive (e.g. I really, really like astronomy, but I wouldn't dare to even try making a career out of it or investing as much time to it as I have done with music). I call myself both a guitarist and a musician, for that's what I do. I have to, it's all I do and know how to do. I wouldn't call myself great, maybe not even good, but that's what I am. My two cents on the topic.
@michaelolz
@michaelolz 4 жыл бұрын
Mary, you’re a lifesaver. I’ve been practicing in the dark. I’m actually playing better IN THE DARK. I’m faster, more confident. My tone and accuracy has improved. And I’m more creative. This one simple thing.
@davidscargil9145
@davidscargil9145 4 жыл бұрын
I always cringe at the idea of calling myself a Musician. I just feel that everyone will think i`m a Tosser.I am,but i don`t want other people knowing. I think it`s partly due to my inbuilt English trait of feeling i am bragging. I`ve settled on,"Shit Musician". It kinda ticks both boxes.A lot of what You say,sounds obvious,but You clearly understand how we operate,and need things spelled out to us. I was guilty of most,ok,all 12 scenarios that You presented. Great Video. Thank You
@xo-gw7xd
@xo-gw7xd 4 жыл бұрын
Ahaa same with the musician thing. I think it's mostly just because I don't feel good enough to give myself that title, but this video was incredibly useful
@MikaelLewisify
@MikaelLewisify 4 жыл бұрын
David Scargil...if you tell people you’re a shit musician, you will probably remain that way.
@vegasspaceprogram6623
@vegasspaceprogram6623 4 жыл бұрын
Same
@mynamo12
@mynamo12 4 жыл бұрын
Mikael Lewis not true
@Hisbay
@Hisbay 4 жыл бұрын
She didn't say musician. She said guitarist
@guyfas2226
@guyfas2226 4 жыл бұрын
I didn't expect you to start singing. Very impressed with the tone of your voice. Fantastic! As a guitarist starting out, i really appreciate you putting the chords to the side when you sing. This way i can follow as well and learn the song. Many instructors don't do this and think that you automatically know how to play. Keep up the great work Mary!
@jimistheman9732
@jimistheman9732 3 жыл бұрын
I feel obligated to point out that her bedroom nightstand is an amp.
@johanjof5613
@johanjof5613 3 жыл бұрын
That is not fair I cant do that, mine is 1m20 height. Who in the world has a nightstand that much higher than his bed
@carlinisatnirvana8499
@carlinisatnirvana8499 3 жыл бұрын
what if she puts a drink on itt 😭
@SynnUnsworth
@SynnUnsworth 4 жыл бұрын
if you dont want to practice in the dark a blindfold can also work. Comfort is also key, adjust the guitar position so you are comfortable, my girlfriend has been trying to play a few chords for years always struggled, i looked at what she did and simply lifted the guitar slightly and she felt much more comfortable and was able to hit the chords she had been struggling with, same applies for standing up
@TheRealJonnyLaw
@TheRealJonnyLaw 4 жыл бұрын
Just found you and I'm sold. Your voice is calming and I just started calling myself a guitarist today. Thank you!
@keramidasnicolas2079
@keramidasnicolas2079 4 жыл бұрын
I'm sold, too.
@srersh05
@srersh05 4 жыл бұрын
hi its been 5 months now..hows it
@TheRealJonnyLaw
@TheRealJonnyLaw 4 жыл бұрын
@@srersh05 it's going well and I'm about to begin recording
@miuletzmitzu6641
@miuletzmitzu6641 4 жыл бұрын
12. Is so TRUE. My friend and I picked up the guitar around the same time (so i'm 3 weeks into it and he's like 5 or 6) and we learned plenty of songs, I wanted and almost learned 'kiling in the name' fully and same for him with 'master of puppets'. We went on a vacation with some other friends for around 4 days and when we got back home it's like we were experts with the guitar. The chords I had a hard time with before the vacation were so easy to play when I got back home. I know practice is important, but so are breaks. So when you can, take 2 days off and relax, then see how it goes for you
@crazyGodLikE
@crazyGodLikE 4 жыл бұрын
So this is what Maeve did when she left for a while..
@joshstern3940
@joshstern3940 4 жыл бұрын
OMG yeahhh
@eniluapecrogal2868
@eniluapecrogal2868 4 жыл бұрын
Yash Kapur YES !!!!!! Thank you
@alexs.1389
@alexs.1389 4 жыл бұрын
WOAHH
@Yayhooray
@Yayhooray 4 жыл бұрын
Wthhh😹😹😹😹
@Megan_Jennifer
@Megan_Jennifer 4 жыл бұрын
Was thinking the same lol
@rayschoch5882
@rayschoch5882 4 жыл бұрын
I'm 75, and you don't need an endorsement from an old man who's no more than "adequate" as a guitarist, but I'll go ahead anyway. Excellent advice, Mary, from start to finish. I don't read music, and the only "tabs" that have ever made sense to me are the diagrams that take up part of the screen when you're playing "Primrose" (Now I know that chord shape I've been playing for years is a B Minor!). Mostly, I've learned by watching and listening to others. I have multiple guitars - all of them low-end in terms of cost, but all of them professionally set up by a luthier to suit me - and I leave some of them out on stands in the room where I'm typing this. I play daily, rotating from one guitar to another, at least once, usually for two or three songs, sometimes for an hour if I really get into it. "Slow down" is great advice for anyone playing live in front of an audience, and I do occasionally play in the dark - it's great for muscle memory. Cheers!
@offal
@offal Жыл бұрын
anyone ever told you you have the most beautiful mouth on earth, your talking voice is so warm and comforting but when you sing it`s like being hit by a freight train, this makes you unique and unique is always wonderful, keep up the great work.
@tobortine
@tobortine 4 жыл бұрын
Just a few observations but they're only my own opinion, others may disagree: *4 - Play in time* 100%. I've been playing a long time and I still forget this one. The bends, the pull offs and all the other tricks are useless if it's out of time. *7 - Gear doesn't make you better* As someone has already said, but it's worth repeating, it doesn't make you better but bad gear can really slow you down and even make you stop. Buy the best you can afford and save up. *9 - 5 minutes a day* Absolutely agree and I find that watching KZbin or TV is a great time to practice. I can listen to a none musical YT session and get 10 minutes in easy. Great video, thanks.
@pcmountaindog
@pcmountaindog 4 жыл бұрын
Wow, I didn't start to make some progress until I stopped trying to play to a click. It caused me all kinds of trouble. For me and I am speaking only for me, no playing to a time click until I can play first. I commited to 1 year of just learning to play, learning theory, learning how to finger pick may way around the board. I don't play in a band, never will, I don't play in public or to an audience. I don't care if I ever can ever play in time. All I want is to be able to play a song possible next year. For now I just want to get my hands to work, I just want to be able to land my fingers on the right frets and pick the right string. When I learn that then I will play to time if possible. Like I said, this is likely not the way for 99 percent but it's the only way for me. Mary, love your playing and singing.
@translationstations
@translationstations 4 жыл бұрын
As someone addicted to scales in my younger days, and all the shredders, I had this idea one day. I would always be playing, enough to drive mom crazy, while just watching a movie, etc.. So, I took a small dish towel. Put this over your hand. It's actually a fascinating thing. You can still hear every note, but it completely dampens the sound. The best thing that I realized was, it made the tightness from my pick and my fretboard very prominent. In other words, I could feel every note rather than hearing the sustain. Granted, I'm only referring to practicing scales. Scales were always a meditative thing for me. Even fall asleep doing it. Great points Mary. Stay positive eveyone. Cheers!
@sadieadler3065
@sadieadler3065 4 жыл бұрын
'Keep your guitar out of it's case' Me sitting in my tiny living room with 12 guitars scattered about ... Yep I think we got that one down
@thomasgeddes8730
@thomasgeddes8730 3 жыл бұрын
Your so jammie ah know can only play one at a time but give a thought to those of us who have one two max and any chance of giving me one 🤔😜🙏
@gruesomevids6655
@gruesomevids6655 4 жыл бұрын
Seriously. Number 2 is so underrated. I'm a gamer. I sit at my computer desk all day. If my guitar is right next to me, i'm gonna pick up that guitar every day and play it whenever a natural break occurs. If it was inside it's case or in a different room i would never play.
@mangamaster4
@mangamaster4 4 жыл бұрын
In between game queues are my go to.
@Badz_B34chst4r
@Badz_B34chst4r 4 жыл бұрын
I loved the "simplified" version of Primrose. For me, it touches someplace raw and pure that neither the official nor the acoustic version do. I am a beginner bassist. Thank you for this video, especially regarding learning complete songs that I love to listen/play and simplify if necessary. It inspired me to work on a bass part for Primrose simplified, it's haunting.
@levipicard7685
@levipicard7685 10 ай бұрын
Did you ever record it?
@Badz_B34chst4r
@Badz_B34chst4r 10 ай бұрын
@@levipicard7685 No I did not. I never got past the beginner level.
@fabiopanico2486
@fabiopanico2486 3 жыл бұрын
I guess one tip I would have loved receiving when I started playing was: pick the guitar style that drives you. A lot of people say we need to start on the classic guitar, then move on to the folk guitar and finally the electric guitar. I personally found it more rewarding to start with an electric guitar, as it really matched what I wanted to play at that time. Also, electric guitar is slightly easier than the other types, so it makes it easier to improve faster and not feel demotivated.
@deans.8659
@deans.8659 4 жыл бұрын
Really good tips and a wonderfull song, Mary! I'm practicing not only standing up but also walking and looking around. And sometimes in the dark too. Don't keep looking at the fretboard all the time like a driving school beginner searching the pedals. Dare making mistakes. Don't try to be perfect in the beginning or compare yourself to Hendrix, Page, Gilmour, M. Spender ... :- ) Mary is playing and talking to the camera simultaneously. Try this! Play some chords or licks while talking to somebody or singing the song! Most important: Never give up learning! Sometimes you feel desperate seeing no progress or even a silver lining and some days or weeks later you're playing the song or the technique like barre chords better and better. That pushes you to go on! And: Always have fun playing guitar, no matter what level or song. Forget "Must" practice. Just play and succes will come by itself. Mix easy and challenging songs and techniques. Practicing always the same like Pentatonics is boring. Diversity helps to improve as well as repetition. Understand, how and why chords or licks (and so on) are working together! Theory! About gear: By my opinion you shouldn't buy too cheap. For beginners midprize guitars are sufficient. If you seriously want to learn and play, buy an instrument about 800$ or more. You'll soon feel and hear the difference of sound and quality. I bought a Dean Hardtail (2 humbucker, great sound) e-guitar to learn Paranoid/Black Sabbath and ... over. Just for fun. Then ... I caught fire and now I'm playing almost every day one or two hours or more especially now during "stayin home". :- ) In the meantime a Fender US Strat and an acoustic by Ortega complete my collection. Cheers to all and to our wonderful Mary from Bavaria/Germany. Take care!! P.S. Sorry for the XXL comment! But I wish I knew all this before when I started playing.
@JustinHollandFitness
@JustinHollandFitness 4 жыл бұрын
11… Practicing in a dark room, well I am blind so I got this one covered LOL
@WideCuriosity
@WideCuriosity 4 жыл бұрын
So... how can you be sure that the room's dark 🤔😉
@AnikRanaSarkar
@AnikRanaSarkar 4 жыл бұрын
@@WideCuriosity For him the room is always dark.
@chokedonthedust
@chokedonthedust 4 жыл бұрын
I’m sorry but your banner is killing me idk why it’s so funny 💀
@JustinHollandFitness
@JustinHollandFitness 4 жыл бұрын
roaring twenties tossing pennies in the pool what?
@chokedonthedust
@chokedonthedust 4 жыл бұрын
@@JustinHollandFitness Your channel banner is funny to me
@musicshallsetyoufree6253
@musicshallsetyoufree6253 4 жыл бұрын
This is one of the best advise. I always make sure that whenever I practice I keep my room dimly lit. Firstly it makes you able to play without heavily relying on the fretmarks and secondly the feeling is awesome.
@ethanmorrow4241
@ethanmorrow4241 4 жыл бұрын
Another tip: play the guitar
@user-fi6rj6sv2k
@user-fi6rj6sv2k 4 жыл бұрын
Another: be consistent with practicing and avoid taking long breaks from practicing, some people take years long breaks
@DrunkenUFOPilot
@DrunkenUFOPilot 4 жыл бұрын
Ohhhhh! Ha, every time I want to practice the guitar, I go pick up the bassoon and play that. No wonder I'm not getting better at guitar!
@stonecat676
@stonecat676 4 жыл бұрын
do yall know what strumming pattern she was using during the song part? thumb-4-4, thumb-4-4?
@bryceantonio
@bryceantonio 4 жыл бұрын
Stone Cat yeah u got it
@emilymason9836
@emilymason9836 3 жыл бұрын
Another tip: Get a guitar
@charlottekerr4312
@charlottekerr4312 4 жыл бұрын
Guitar is basically the only thing that I want to do so much that I want to practice. I have been playing violin in school for a few years and I never want to practice 😅
@PaulRubino
@PaulRubino Жыл бұрын
I used to record my piano practices. Initially i was so hyper self-conscious, worried about mistakes being recorded. I finally got to the point that i never thought about the recorder. This was the key to allowing me to play comfortably in front of an audience. I was no longer self-conscious.
@normannippy8471
@normannippy8471 4 жыл бұрын
When it comes to making video, you're a natural. Please keep them coming.
@Reliz
@Reliz 4 жыл бұрын
I've been playing for only a bit over a year but I've been playing for at least an hour every day and I must say it shows:)
@Reliz
@Reliz 4 жыл бұрын
@@machinedaluminum haha ment it as in practice is worth^^ but I actually post on insta if you don't trust me ;P @relizmusic ^^ honestly as long as you have fun playing you'll vet better that's my spirit:)
@Reliz
@Reliz 4 жыл бұрын
@@machinedaluminum havha no worries :P much appreciated :)
@stevenh5057
@stevenh5057 4 жыл бұрын
Reliz i am exactly like that, i’m approaching two years and i’m very proud of my progress. putting in the hours really shows in the long run. i play 45-1 hour a day, or even 4+ hours if i’m feeling super creative 👍👍
@Reliz
@Reliz 4 жыл бұрын
@@stevenh5057 dope! Keep grinding🔥
@anuvette
@anuvette 4 жыл бұрын
Brah i play like 4-10 hours a day and I don't think im improving a bit I've been play for a year now
@Jakecaseyy
@Jakecaseyy 2 жыл бұрын
This was the best beginner advice vid I heard not none of all that Dorian mode and theory bs this was just solid good beginner advice!
@_martin_makes_
@_martin_makes_ 4 жыл бұрын
Practicing in the dark: I'm just closing my eyes, works well :)
@SoiledWig
@SoiledWig 4 жыл бұрын
Well she did say you could do that, but you can cheat that way.
@mmccartney6579
@mmccartney6579 4 жыл бұрын
Timing is everything. Counting in, out loud is SO important, especially for "beginners."
@markh9875
@markh9875 4 жыл бұрын
Metronome is God.
@pcmountaindog
@pcmountaindog 4 жыл бұрын
I started with a teacher who forced me to play to a click. I got nothing accomplished. I was still struggling just to get my fingers in place and I could never keep up. He kept talking, watch me, follow me list, listen to what I'm playing and listen to the click. I would try and then just one more input and I went totally blank. Blank, blank, blank, blank, then it would take a minute to clear my mind and start over. 1 hour of practice time was gone in the blink of an eye and so was 30 dollars and nothing accomplished. Now before you jump all over me, I understand why it's important but there is absolutely no point in doing this until I start to find the strings, changes etc. No way I can play to a click until first I can play a bit. When I tried to explain what was happening and why it was giving me trouble, he would not listen. I wanted to slow down and go back to basics and he wouldn't hear of it. I fired him and I am making much more progress on my own. When I become somewhat proficient, I will give it a try. But for me as a beginner it flat out causes nothing but trouble. I might work fine for most but not me.
@JedemSvakiDan
@JedemSvakiDan 4 жыл бұрын
@@pcmountaindog like any skill in life, you have to lay foundations first. Never go for the second step until you make the first. You need to strive to put the basic things in your unconscious so you can build on it. If you can't do some task, go back a step and spend all the time you need to master it. Always go back to basics. Become a master of basics.
@mooniebung5945
@mooniebung5945 3 жыл бұрын
I always come back to this whenever I feel I'm not improving
@yvonnedoherty7666
@yvonnedoherty7666 4 жыл бұрын
You have a beautiful voice both speaking and singing. I appreciate your tips ( I am learning the ukulele)
@Razyshadow
@Razyshadow 4 жыл бұрын
"Gear doesn't make you better" - Try telling that to my dealer.
@sergehudon5632
@sergehudon5632 4 жыл бұрын
i'm here for the vigier and the two-rock amp !! ;)
@ronpool6577
@ronpool6577 4 жыл бұрын
So true... 'Hi, I need a new pick' Leaving with a new guitar
@Larzemensch
@Larzemensch 4 жыл бұрын
Tip 13, don’t let your dealer buy you stuff you don’t want ;-)
@embracethesuck1041
@embracethesuck1041 4 жыл бұрын
Now when you say "gear"....
@silversrayliegh5924
@silversrayliegh5924 4 жыл бұрын
As a learning guitarist, I realized how true all her words were and how slowly and steadily across the years I found the same routines she described, and am now following them. BTW @Mary your voice is lovely. I don't know how I was directed to this video but I am happy I was.
@josephmorris3778
@josephmorris3778 4 жыл бұрын
"Practice in the dark" Me, who is still afraid of the dark sometimes: No, I don't think I will.
@slawaxas
@slawaxas 4 жыл бұрын
can you talk in normal lingus, you fool?
@davidpetersson8827
@davidpetersson8827 4 жыл бұрын
then i would recomend not looking at the neck when playing focus on a dot in the room you are and just go by feel on the neck that is what i do
@josephmorris3778
@josephmorris3778 4 жыл бұрын
@@davidpetersson8827 Thanks, man.
@MyKozi
@MyKozi 4 жыл бұрын
Maybe playing « fear of the dark » would help you 😂
@MikaelLewisify
@MikaelLewisify 4 жыл бұрын
Joseph Morris, playing in the dark is actually really good advice and will help your ability to play without looking at your fingers.
@guitarjay123
@guitarjay123 4 жыл бұрын
Its interesting to hear this tips as a guitar player who's been playing for 25 years. I agree with the 5 minutes a day, thing. I believe in that myself and tell every new guitarist that. The tips that were most interesting to me were play in the dark, and have the guitar out. But I have some tips of my own that I would like to share some about being a new guitar player and others that are generally related: 1. Start playing with other people as soon as possible no matter what your skill level. 2. Always challenge yourself to learn new techniques whether that be new pieces of music, writing, learning scales chords. 3. Learning from either a teacher or someone who has a higher skill level than you is always a way to raise yourself to a higher skill level faster 4. Also in the same vain always surround yourself with people who are better than you rather than people who don''t have much to contribute to you. Always be the weakest link. 5. Get used to playing in front of people as soon as possible. Overcoming your stage fright early on with help you with your live presence and thus give you a reason to get better. Also when you get over your stage fright you'll find that playing live is one of biggest natural high/dopamine/endorphin kick you've ever had similar chemically to sex 6. as soon as you can make anything happen, don't wait to start actually writing songs, and or learning songs. Starting to use your guitar as a creative tool right away will push your skills to the limit and also thus motivate you to get better. It doesn't matter if its not the greatest song in the world, the fact is that you tried and the stigma is removed early on. 7. To pick up new skills start playing along with your favorite songs. You can learn to play the exact songs or you can learn to improvise new parts to those same songs. You can also challenge yourself by playing along with music that you're not used to to expand your horizons and go outside of your comfort zone. 8. Along the same lines don't always learn the same types of songs. Mix your pallet up right away. Learn to play if you can both acoustically and electrically. You learn different skills that compliment eachother. 9. If you're practicing to be more of a lead guitar player, use lighter strings. 10 gauge and below. 10. If better tone is more important to you then use higher gauge strings. 11. Your first guitar shouldn't be super expensive but at the same time it should have correct action and intonation meaning how it feels and how it stays in tune against itself. 12. Looking at a guitar in a picture and hearing it on a recording is different than actually picking one up yourself and trying it. The best place to try new guitars is a music store. If you have a specific guitar you're after then call all the music stores in the area and find what they have. You don't have to buy it if you don't like it. 13. If you're going for a sound its not just about the guitar its about everything that you're using from your pick to the strings, to the amp, the cord, the batteries in your effects if you have them, your amp and everything you're using , in the order you're using it, the settings they're set on, the nuances of your techniques, and the environment you're playing in. 14. Don't expect to be good right away, expect to suck, I've seen a lot of people just drop music because they couldn't stand self-rejection. You don't dump your own boat at the first sign of rough waters. If you just started a hobby and were good right away you wouldn't appreciate the journey. No one starts off good right off the bat. You think Hendrix or Dimebag Darrell started off like rock gods? No they were terrible. Ask any great musician. Expect 1 or 2 years of hard practice to get to a level that you're actually proud of. Remember learning any skill is not a game for the faint of heart. Be brave, stick to your guns and never give up. Be the Tortoise not the Hare. Its better to try consistently hard then to be natural and never practice. All you need is 5 minutes a day. 15. Every accomplishment you make in being a beginner take steps to reward yourself for your hard work, but don't let that stop you from finding new challenges 16. Like earlier points people respect you more when you're not just noodling and musically masturbating, they like to hear that you have something to say, jamming is fun but you shouldn't put all your energy into that aspect of playing, if you're jamming live at least work on solid material to start from so that people have something to cling to. Relying strictly on improvisation is a shaky way to build real musical relationships. Use your good ideas don't just toss them out as soon as you play them. 17. Record your ideas right away, write them down, use your cell phone if you have to, otherwise you'll probably forget everything. write tablature, musical notation, draw the chords do whatever you gotta do, whatever your system may be. If you're having trouble with it have a friend help you out, collaborating is awesome but get used to writing songs by yourself 18. Music theory helps but music isn't just a bunch of equations. theres guitarsts that suck and know a lot of theory and there's guitarists that are awesome that do know theory and anywhere in between. Theory can't teach you to play or write like you mean it. That comes from you. 19. I don’t care what some people say Drugs and Alcohol can really screw up your playing and your musical social dynamic. It’s a slippery slope testing those kinds of boundries especially with hard drugs, One hit or one shot easily turns into 2 then 4 then 6 you’ll never know if you can moderate yourself. Its dangerous once you associate playing with getting getting intoxicated. Some people never get out that hole. Drugs don’t make you play better, you make you play better. People also write way less material when they’re on drug benders there’s been studies to prove that, look it up. Its also just makes common sense. 20. Music is never inherently wrong, whether it sounds good or bad is entirely subjective, you may play a bad note, you might screw up, and if you do just act like you meant to. Don’t stop playing every time you screw up otherwise you may never get anywhere, just find a way to keep playing through it, if the mistake was that bad just play through it again and try to do better the next time around. Also the guitar talks back to you, it doesn’t always do what you mean to sometimes due to the layout of the fretboard or a misplacement of your fingers you end up with a different sound or note than what you meant. Embrace it.
@rickrecco143
@rickrecco143 4 жыл бұрын
Punctuation.
@deaz226
@deaz226 4 жыл бұрын
thanks for the tips dude
@guitarjay123
@guitarjay123 4 жыл бұрын
@@deaz226 I'm glad I could make a difference, man. I rarely converse on the internet anymore.
@barryworrall6043
@barryworrall6043 4 жыл бұрын
Boss tips them mate
@sauroros
@sauroros 3 жыл бұрын
Practice in the dark is my favorite. Thank you Mary.
@shanec4441
@shanec4441 4 жыл бұрын
If I could go back and advise myself years ago, I would have said to stick with electric guitar never give up, learn Nashville numbers, challenge yourself, and understand cord theory.
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